2026
8 books; 1,064,255 words.
January - 2 books; 197,861 words.
- As We Have Always Done: Indigenous Freedom Through Radical Resistance by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson - really interesting political theory, although I think I have to read more Indigenous political theory to truly understand it. 8/10; 102,502 words.
- The Hobbit, or There and Back Again by JRR Tolkien - reread. I really enjoy the delightful writing style not in place in either the Silmarillion or LOTR. 7/10; 95,359 words.
February - 1 book; 479,103 words.
- Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien - reread. Incredibly enjoyable, but I still prefer the Silmarillion.
March - 5 books, 387,291 words.
- The Elements of Eloquence: Secrets of the Perfect Turn of Phrase by Mark Forsyth - good book, but unfortunately I already knew most of the things that Forsyth mentioned. However, it was nice to find words to things I've been doing for years - like zeugma. 7/10; ~50,000 words.
- The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy - finally got around to reading Roy's second novel! I'll be honest, I enjoyed her debut (The God of Small Things) much more, but it was still very good. 9/10; 130,853 words.
- Borderlands / La Frontera: the New Mestiza by Gloria AnzaldĂșa - AnzaldĂșa's work was interesting in the fact that her thoughts were interesting, but I can't say I agree with many of them. She was quite obviously a part of the political lesbian movement (that being a lesbian is an active, political rejection of men), which I don't agree with, and also posed that cultural appropriation and stealing of Indigenous property was because white people lacked spirituality? And then there was the odd, hallucination-like process she detailed for her writing process. The cultural appropriation point is probably the one I disagree with most in this book; it suggests that cultural appropriation and stealing of Indigenous property was to fill a void and thus that white people aren't (at our core) at fault for these practices. She also has some interesting ideas about the feminine being inherently better than the masculine. Although the result of what she talked about was interesting, the underlying theory I find much to disagree with. 6/10; 50,019 words.
- The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan - I'll be honest, a lot of these experiences mirror my own as Chinese. There was one passage describing Lena's Chinese features (or rather, lack thereof) that pretty much hit exactly what I feel about my own appearance. There was this distinct loss of culture that permeated how I feel about my own loss of culture. I have often thought that I have never truly read about someone like me; this remains true, but The Joy Luck Club comes closer than anything else. Coupled with Tan's poignant writing, I thoroughly enjoyed the book. 9/10; 91,419 words.
- Dear Life by Alice Munro - a collection of short stories. The first two I very much disliked, but I found myself enjoying every subsequent story more. I especially enjoyed "Pride" and "Night". 8/10; ~65,000 words.
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